214 lines
4.9 KiB
Markdown
214 lines
4.9 KiB
Markdown
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# GnuPG Quickstart
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I love GPG and the way it works. I know there are many that complain
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about it because it has flaws. My stance on this is that I prefer
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battle-tested software with known flaws to something with unknown flaws.
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Anyway, this should get you started with GnuPG
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## Prerequisites
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Install gpg and pinentry.
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<pre>
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# pkg_add gnupg pinentry
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</pre>
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## You need a Key
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If you want to lock and unlock stuff, you need a key. This is how you
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get to one:
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<pre>
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$ gpg --generate-key
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</pre>
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Hop through the wizard until you see these lines:
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<pre>
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pub rsa3072 2021-05-19 [SC] [expires: 2023-05-19]
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BA696588D9A04AD9F70DA33EC54733F6DBECC2C1
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uid John Doe <j.doe@example.com>
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sub rsa3072 2021-05-19 [E] [expires: 2023-05-19]
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</pre>
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If you see an error like:
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gpg: agent_genkey failed: Permission denied
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Add the following entry and try again.
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<pre>
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$ echo "allow-loopback-pinentry" >> ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf
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</pre>
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Congratulations, you got yourself a GPG Key. This long gibberish is your
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full GPG Key ID. Most of the time, you can simply use the last 8
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characters. So the short version of this GPG Key is DBECC2C1.
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You can set it as default key, so it's used to encrypt stuff when no
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explicit key is given.
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<pre>
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$ echo "default-key DBECC2C1" >> ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf
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</pre>
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## Share the key with your people
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If you want someone to be able to encrypt something for you, send him or
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her the output of:
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<pre>
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$ gpg --export -a DBECC2C1
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</pre>
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You can also use your email address instead of the Key ID, if you have
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only one key with it. This key is public. So put it on some webspace and
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add a link to your email header or signature.
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## Upload the key so people can find it (optional)
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You can also upload your key to a key server. For this, configure a
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keyserver:
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<pre>
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$ echo "keyserver hkps://keys.openpgp.org" >> ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf
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</pre>
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Then send your key to it:
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<pre>
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$ gpg --send-keys DBECC2C1
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</pre>
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## You got a key from someone
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Add a key from someone else to gnupg, so you can use it to encrypt data
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for this person. If the key is on your harddrive, use:
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<pre>
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$ gpg --import <pubkeyfile.asc>
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</pre>
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The file ending here is kind of undefined. Some call it .asc, .gpg, .pub
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or .key. If the key is on a key server, you can import it like so:
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<pre>
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$ gpg --recv-key 52BE43BA
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</pre>
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This would import my key. You can look at it now with:
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<pre>
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$ gpg --list-keys 52BE43BA
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</pre>
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## Encrypt a file
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This encrypts the file plain.txt with the public key DBECC2C1.
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<pre>
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$ gpg --encrypt -r DBECC2C1 file.txt
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</pre>
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Now you have file.txt.gpg, which is the encrypted version
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## Decrypt a file
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GnuPG automaticall figures out what key it can use to decrypt a file. So
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this will output the content of file.txt on the terminal. If you want
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to save the output in a file, add -o file.txt.
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<pre>
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$ gpg -d file.txt.gpg
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$ gpg -d file.txt.gpg -o file.txt
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</pre>
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## Choose a better password prompt (optional)
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You can change the way gpg asks for the password:
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<pre>
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$ cat ~/.gnupg/gpg-agent.conf
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[...]
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pinentry-program /usr/local/bin/pinentry-curses
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[...]
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</pre>
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Options are:
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- pinentry (sometimes also called pinentry-tty)
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- pinentry-curses
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- pinentry-gtk2: pkg_add pinentry-gtk2
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- pinentry-gnome3: pkg_add pinentry-gnome3
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- pinentry-dmenu: https://github.com/ritze/pinentry-dmenu
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*Note: If you use a console pinentry program and want to use gpg with a
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GUI tool (like thunderbird), the password prompt will be invisible and
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gpg/thunderbird will freeze.*
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Makes sense, doesn't it?
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## Start GPG Agent for password caching (optional)
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Put this in your .kshrc or .bashrc:
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<pre>
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export GPG_TTY=$(tty)
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gpg-connect-agent /bye
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</pre>
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## Make a Backup (not so optional)
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There is no handholding cloud or support team you can call when you
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messed up or deleted your key. So back it up safely.
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Either you backup your ~/.gnugp directory, or you export the secret
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keys and backup them safely.
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<pre>
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$ gpg --export-secret-keys -a DBECC2C1 > gpg_key_backup.sec
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</pre>
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Seriously, don't skip this step.
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## Configure Mutt (optional)
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Install mutt with the gpgme flavor. Gpgme is the "new way" of handling
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gpg in mutt.
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<pre>
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# pkg_add mutt--gpgme
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</pre>
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If you're not on OpenBSD, check with `mutt -v` if it was compiled with
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the `--enable-gpgme` option. Then enable it in mutt.
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<pre>
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$ cat ~/.muttrc
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[...]
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crypt_use_gpgme = yes
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[...]
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</pre>
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In the mutt compose view, you can now select Security Options.
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<pre>
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From: c0dev0id <c0@example.com>
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To: j.doe@example.com
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Cc:
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Bcc:
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Subject: Hello my friend
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Reply-To:
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Fcc: =Sent
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Security: Sign, Encrypt (PGP/MIME)
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Sign as: <default>
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</pre>
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You can change the setting with the key "p", which should bring up a
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selection menu.
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PGP (e)ncrypt, (s)ign, sign (a)s, (b)oth, s/(m)ime or (c)lear?
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*That's it! GPG is not difficult. You need to know a few bits, but these are not
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more difficult than many other things we do on a daily basis.*
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